S Logo
 Dictionary
 Open and Collaborative
 Home page

Spanish Open dictionary by furoya



furoya
  15219

 ValuePosition
Position22
Accepted meanings152192
Obtained votes1102
Votes by meaning0.017
Inquiries4401123
Queries by meaning297
Feed + Pdf Follow the furoya dictionary updates through this feed using any of the existing free feed readersFollow the furoya dictionary updates through this pdf using any of the existing free pdf readers

"Statistics updated on 5/13/2024 7:26:20 AM"




Meanings sorted by:

antonimo de hostil
  41

See antonym, hostile, related.

  
antonimo de queso
  43

See antonym, cheese (colloquial adjective).

  
antonimo de orfanato
  36

See antonym, orphanage.

  
antonimo de habla
  35

See antonym , speaks ( obviously , as a noun ) .

  
antonimo de sopa
  42

See antonym, soup, verbs/soup.

  
el antonimo de ladron
  51

See the , antonym , of , thief .

  
antonimo de convertir
  38

Revert? Mmmm. . . Nop. Of course this is a misplaced query, and the best thing to do in the dictionary is to link to antonym and convert, and take it out of the list of 'Anonymous Requests', but if I wanted to answer it as if we were in an iajú answer I find the problem of etymology, since the Latin convertere has the prefix (in its variant with) not as meeting but as an intensifier of pouring ( return, rotate, change, return, flip" ), so the antonym would have to be sought to ' . . . pour' . And it doesn't occur to me. Although Spanish has words for everything; some that works in practice should be .

  
acrónimo
  43

It is the reduction of a sentence just like an acronym, but created so that it can be pronounced as a word and not have to say it letter by letter. It is formed by the Greek 8206; 945; 954; 961; 959; 962; ( akros "extreme, in this case as surpasser, improved" ) 959; 957; 959; 956; 945; ( onoma "name") .

  
polis
  35

Name for each city - state that made up helade or Ancient Greece. It also includes its chora or conurbation. The original voice is 960; 959; 955; 953; 962; ( polis ) which is a noun in the singular , although for Spanish it is also used in the plural .

  
ideograma
  38

An image or graphic that represents an idea, a concept, or a word, but not its letters or morphemes, although in some scriptures it functions as such to compose words or phrases. From the Greek 953; 948; 949; 945; ( idea "idea" ) 947; 961; 945; 956; 956; 945; ( gramma "letter" ) .

  
criptogénico
  34

It is said of what has a hidden, unknown origin. It consists of the Greek voices 954; 961; 965; 960; 964; 959; 962; ( kryptos "hidden" ) 947; 949; 957; 959; 962; ( genos "birth, origin" ) 953; 954; 959; 962; ( -ikos "relative to" ) . See airtight.

  
dialelo
  41

It is a type of paradox whereby two arguments are presented for a proof, but the validity of the first depends on that of the second, and that of the second depends on the first. It is commonly known as a vicious circle. It is also a term used in genetics, for crossing for the improvement of plant and animal species. It is a Greek voice, where 948; 953; 945; 955; 955; 951; 955; 959; 962; (diallelos) means "reciprocal".

  
tíaso
  30

In ancient Greece an 'aunt' was a group of people (usually women) who consecrated themselves to a god, and also the place where they met. The original meaning was in the procession of followers of Dionysius, a retinue of drunken partygoers, to which were added the maenads and then the nymphs. It comes from voice 952; 953; 945; 963; 959; 962; (thíasos) which names a group of people with an end, and is as broad as "courtship, circus, company, . . . "

  
hemeroteca
  33

It is a type of library specialized in daily publications such as newspapers or news newspapers, which also encompasses magazines, comics, collections in fascicles, everything that is published at intervals. The name is formed by the Greek 951; 956; 949; 961; 945; ( hemera "day" ) 952; 951; 954; 951; ( theke , "wardrobe , box" ) .

  
pantocrátor
  34

It is a word of Greek origin that translates as "Almighty", and today it refers to the Lord, the Judeo-Christian God. In painting it is a religious image of Jesus or the Christian God in front, with his right hand extended as a sign of blessing and with the Holy Gospels on the left; it is typical of Byzantine art. It consists of 960 voices; 945; 957; 964; 945; ( "all , total" ) 954; 961; 945; 964; 959; 962; ( kratos "power, government") .

  
vagina
  47

It is the "duct that connects the vulva to the uterus" in viviparous females. The name has a macho and Latin origin in vagina, ae ("sheath for sword or knife").

  
mesocolon
  36

In anatomy, it is the name of a membrane that attaches the colon to the abdominal wall.

  
esófago
  50

It is the part of the digestive system that is between the pharynx and the stomach. To The Spanish it comes from the Latin oesophagus, i , but its etymology is Greek by 949; 953; 963; 969; or 949; 963; 969; ( eiso , that "that which is within" ) 966; 945; 947; 949; 953; 957; (fagein, "to eat") and is understood as "where the food comes in".

  
transcraneal
  39

It literally means "through the skull". However, it is used in medicine to name non-invasive techniques of neurological treatments with electrical or magnetic stimulation, or Doppler studies of the brain without surgery, without physically traversing the bones.

  
cervicouterino
  47

In anatomy it is related to the "cervix". It is formed by the voices cervix ("neck") uterus ("womb").

  






Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Facebook  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Twitter  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on Google+  Follow www.wordmeaning.org on feed